UAE’s national cyber defense system blocked coordinated campaign involving network infiltration, ransomware deployment and phishing operations designed to destabilize essential services.
The UAE Cyber Security Council announced Saturday that national cyber defenses successfully thwarted organized terrorist cyberattacks targeting the country’s digital infrastructure and vital sectors in coordinated operations designed to destabilize the nation and disrupt essential services. The attacks marked a qualitative shift in terrorist tactics through exploitation of artificial intelligence technologies to develop sophisticated offensive tools.
The Council confirmed that attackers attempted network infiltration, deployment of ransomware and conducted systematic phishing campaigns targeting national platforms. The use of AI-powered attack tools represents an evolution in terrorist groups’ technical capabilities, demonstrating how extremist organizations now harness advanced technologies previously associated with nation-state actors or cybercriminal syndicates.
National cyber defense systems operating around the clock detected and blocked the threats before disruptions occurred. The Council said individual safety, personal data protection and continuity of critical services remain top priorities, with defenses maintained through cooperation between service providers, national and international entities, and specialized organizations leveraging strategic partnerships and advanced international technical expertise.
The announcement provided limited specifics about which vital sectors faced targeting, the attacks’ exact timing or the terrorist groups responsible. Officials stated the national cybersecurity system strengthens protection, accelerates recovery capabilities and enhances digital resilience but offered no technical details about detection methods, attack vectors or infrastructure targeted.
The timing coincides with Ramadan’s beginning, when charitable giving increases across the UAE and Muslim world. The Council urged residents to remain vigilant online and adopt safe practices when using digital platforms, particularly when making donations or sharing personal and financial information.



Cybercriminals traditionally exploit seasonal increases in online activity, making religious observance periods high-risk windows for fraud and social engineering attacks.
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The Council shared guidance on protecting data and avoiding fraud, warning that attackers leverage increased digital transactions during Ramadan to harvest credentials and financial information. The seasonal advisory shows how threat actors adapt campaigns to cultural contexts, timing attacks when targets are most likely to lower defenses or trust unsolicited communications claiming charitable purposes.
The UAE’s announcement reflects broader regional cybersecurity concerns as Middle Eastern nations face persistent targeting from terrorist organizations, nation-state actors and financially motivated cybercriminals. Critical infrastructure including energy, telecommunications, transportation and financial services represents high-value targets where successful attacks could produce cascading failures affecting millions.
The defensive success follows the Council’s earlier warning that “over 90,000 to 200,000 breach attempts strike the UAE infrastructure every single day.” The statistics hardline the escalating threat velocity as automation and artificial intelligence lower barriers to entry for less sophisticated actors while simultaneously enhancing capabilities of advanced persistent threats.
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The UAE has positioned itself among the first nations globally to implement comprehensive post-quantum cryptography strategies, anticipating threats from quantum computing’s eventual ability to break current encryption standards. The government expanded cooperation with QuantumGate, the national platform specializing in quantum-resilient cybersecurity, focusing on enhancing anticipation and mitigation of quantum decryption risks before capabilities emerge.
Dr. Mohammed Al Kuwaiti, Head of Cybersecurity for the UAE Government, previously stated the country’s approach centers on anticipating threats rather than waiting for them to materialize. The proactive posture reflects recognition that defensive cybersecurity requires continuous evolution matching or exceeding adversary innovation cycles.
The lack of attribution details in the announcement prevents assessment of whether attacks originated from established terrorist organizations, state-sponsored actors masquerading as terrorists or cybercriminal groups. The “terrorist” designation carries significant geopolitical implications but without evidence linking attacks to specific groups, independent verification remains impossible. However, the defensive success demonstrates the UAE’s substantial investment in national cybersecurity infrastructure and international partnerships.
